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terday morning, French time, it was generally as?sumed here that the German envoys within theFrench lines had been instructed by wireless tosign the terms.Forty-seven hours had been required for thecourier to reach German headquarters and un?questionably several hours were necessary forthe examination of the terms and a decision. Itwas regarded as possible? however, that the de?cision may have been made at Berlin and instruc?tions transmitted from there by the new Germangovernment.Germany has been given until J.1??/clock this morning, French time, Ior 6 o'clock Washington time, to ac?cept So hostilities will end at thehour bet by Marshal Foch for a de?cision by Germany for peace or fortontinuation of the war.The momentous news that thearmistice had been signed was tele?phoned to the White House forIransmission to the President a fewminutes before it was given to thenewspaper correspondents. Laterit was said there would be no state?ment from the White House at thistime.Berlin Seized by Reds;Tro ops Jo inRevo lu tionContinu?! from pace 1action was for the purpose of assuring the provisioning of the army andassisting in the solution of demobilization problems.The Wolff Bureau, the semi-official news agency of Germany, an?nounced in a dispatch from Berlin that it has been taken over by theSoldiers' and Workmen's Council.Berlin Mutiny Bloodless;Bertha Krupp Arrested \BASEL, Nqv. 10.?An official dispatch received by the Havas Agency jfrom Berlin to-day says: j"Official?The revolution has resulted in a striking victoryalmost without the effusion of blood."A general strike was declared this morning. It brought a cessa?tion of work in all workshops at about 10 o'clock."A regiment of Nurenberg Chasseurs passed over to the people.Other troops rapidly followed their action."The Alexander Regiment, after hearing a declaration by DeputyWells, went over to the revolution."LONDON, Nov. 10.?Essen, where the great Krupp steel works are jsituated, is reported to be in the hands of the revolutionaries, says a dis- jpatch from Amsterdam to the Exchange Telegraph Company. ?Lieutenant Krupp von Bohlen und Halbaeh, the head of the Krupp jworks, and his wife (Bertha Krupp) have been arrested.Leipsic and Stuttgart JoinLeipsic, the largest city in Saxony; Stuttgart, the capital of Wurt?emberg, and Cologne and Frankfort have joined the revolution, accord?ing to reports from the Danish frontier, telegraphed here by the Copen?hagen correspondent of the Exchange Telegraph Company.The Soldiers' Councils at Stuttgart, Cologne and Frankfort have de?cided to proclaim a republic.A Council of Workmen and Soldiers has been established at Chem?nitz, Saxony, according to the Wolff News Agency. The Council tookcharge of military and civil affairs. There were no disturbances. The ?Council proclaimed that its aim was a socialistic republic for Germany.In some places, notably in Anhalt, Hesse-Darmstadt and Mecklen?burg-Schwerin, the princely house?; are cooperating with the reformingparties in establishing a new orr^er of things.An official dispatch from Darmstadt, capital of the Grand Duchy ofHesse, announces that the Grand Duke of Hesse has decreed the forma?tion of a Council of State to take over the business of the government"until a final settlement of the questions arising from the present sit?uation*"tjp tl* the present the most serious conflict has taken place in Kiel.The ?o?diers* ??fl Workmen's Councils in most of the large cities appearto b? deputing t?iMr first efforts to organizing the food supplies, foreseeing!that any lilck of provision in this respect will prove a fruitful source ofdisorder.Delegates of the revolutionary German navy arrived in Berlin Fri?day, according to a dispatch from Copenhagen to the Exchange Telegraphi ompany. They conferred for several hours with the Minister of Marineand with members of the Reichstag majority parties.It is stated that Hugo Haase, a Socialist leader in the Reichstag, hasthe situation at Hamburg in hand.A train filled with soldiers has been sent from Bremen to persuadeether towns to join the revolution, says a dispatch from the Danish fron?tier, forwarded here by the correspondent at Copenhagen of the ExchangeTelegraph Company.Aix-la-Chapelle SeizedAmong the latest towns to come under the control of the Workmen'sand Soldiers' Councils are Aix-la-Chapelle, Cassel, Nuremburg, Mannheim,Gladbach and Muenster, says an Amsterdam dispatch. A general strikehas been proclaimed at Nuremburg and Mannheim.Order has been restored at Hamburg, where the police have beenpermitted to resume their duties under the direction of the Workmen's andSoldiers' Councils. Places of ifciblic amusement have been reopened.At Cologne the whole garrison sided with the Workers' Council, whoseprogramme included, according to the Cologne "Gazette," the abolition ofall German dynasties, the annulment of war loans, with special considera?tion for the subscribers from the poorer classes; the liberation of all po?litical prisoners and the abolition of saluting.The military and civil prisoners in Cologne are in the hands of thecouncil, and already all the prisoners have been released. The majorityand minority sections of the Socialists have been fused.Among the incidents of the revolution is the renunciation by theGrand Duke of Saxe-Weimar and his family of the right of exemptionfrom taxation. At L?beck a lawyer was charged with treason becausehe acted without authority from the Workmen's and Soldiers' Councilin liberating prisoners.COPENHAGEN, Nov. 9 (By The Associated Press).?German guard I\es8els in the mine fields off the Great Beit and Little Belt have left their jstations. The crews forced the officers to leave the vessels and then jhoisted the red flag.More Battleship Crews JoinThe crews of the German dreadnoughts Posen, Ostfriesland, Nassaunnd Oldenburg, in Kiel Harbor, have joined the revolution. Marine.?occupied the lock gates at Ostmoor and fought down a coast artillery di- j*? ision which offered resistance.Six more cruisers flying the red flag arrived at Hamburg last night,&ay? a Wolff News Agency dispatch received here.Up to Friday night the number of persons killed at Kiel was twentyfight, according to information received here. The majority of thesewere officers.The railway stations in the entire industrial districts of Germanyfrom Dortmund to Duisburg hav?Pbecn occupied by the Soldiers' Councils,.?ccordlng to a dispatch from Esten. There were no disorders.The German training ship Schlesien, with 400 men on hoard, whichfled from Kiel when the sailors' revolt broke out there, has arrived atMarstal in distress. The crew hn^l been unable to obtain water at otherDanish ports. Two German cruisers in control of Red force:* are watch?ing ontaidc of Marstal.The commander of the Schlesien says that he believes Danzig is theonly G*rm*n port he can safely enter.The Schlesien is a prc-dreadnought battleship. It is 413 feet long; nd displaces 18,O0OffeWl?. Marslal, where she took refuge, i_ a smallport on the east coast of the island of A roe, in the Bajtic.GERMANT IN THE GRIP OF THE REDSThe revolt in Gemany has spread from the coastal regions to practically all parts of the country. Citiespreviously reported held by the Socialists are underlined; those reported yesterday are twice underlined.Sonderburg is in the hands of the revolutionists and the red flag !has been raised on ships there.Sonderburg is .situated on the island, of Alsen, Schleswig. It is !thirteen miles northeast of. Flensburg. It has a population of 5,000.The "Rhenish Westfalian Zeitung," of Essen, announces that Eutin,jthe capital of the principality of Luebeck, is in the hands of the Soldiers'Council. Many persons, both civilians and military, have been shot.Troops Back SocialistsIn Seizing GovernmentWASHINGTON, Nov. 10.?Radio advices sent out by the Germanstation at Nauen and picked up by the American naval towers were madepublic to-day by the State Department, with the explanation that it didnot vouch for their authenticity. The messages described the events ofSaturday in Berlin, showing that the Socialist party had taken control ofthe government there.The first dispatch says that on Saturday morning the Socialist partyannounced its intention of leaving the Cabinet, and a delegation fromregiments of the garrisons of Berlin and neighboring towns expressedtheir allegiance to the new government.Socialists Demand ControlOn Saturday Deputies Ebert and Scheidemann called on the Chan?cellor and stated that they had decided to take the government into theirhands.Much of the matter was the same as that made public by the BritishWireless Press, except for slight differences in translation from the Ger?man in which it was sent, out. It appeared \o show the revolutionarymovement in entire accord with Friedrich Ebert, the Socialist leader se?lected for Chancellor under the regency of Prince Maximilian.One of the messages describing events not yet menti.ned by the Brit?ish wireless follows:"On the morning of Saturday, November 9, Socialist party declaredthat (it) leaves Cabinet. Since then Socialists and Independent Socialistcommittee were holding permanent joint sitting in Reichstag, where soonafterward appeared delegations of various regiments garrisoned in Berlinand neighboring towns in order express their allegiance to new populargovernment. Building of Socialise newspaper 'Vorwaerts' was occupiedby squad of three hundred riflemen in order protect against possibleeventualities on side of former r?gime.Sailors March On Capital"Movement among troops had originated by speech made by Reichs?tag member Wells in courtyard of barracks of Alexander Regiment, uporwhich regiment, together with large number of its officers, decided uporsending mentioned delegation to Reichstag."At noon Socialists Ebert and Scheidemann went in military automobile, accompanied by troops, to Chancellor and declared that (they?)were decided take government in their hands."In Reichstag further arrived delegation sent by three thousancsailors who are marching in direction Berlin, and are expected duringI afternoon.? It is repoi-ted thut they are equally ready to express alleI giance to new popular government."i ______?Bavarian Republic WantsTo Lead Germany to PeaceAMSTERDAM, Nov. 8.?The proclamation .issued in Munich ibehalf of the Council of Workers, Soldiers and Peasants, which const] tuted itsglf into a Diet, announcing a republic had been formed in B.j varia, declared that the "Democratic and Socialist Republic of Bavarij has the strength to realize a peace for Germany, preserving that countrI from the worst."The proclamation, after promising a Constituent Assembly, to Li elected by all adult men and women, says that Bavaria will make Germanready for a league of nations. It continues:"The present revolution is needed to complete the self-governmeiof the people before enemy armies stream across our country or befoitroops should, after the armistice, bring about chaos."The Council will insure strict order. Soldiers in barracks wilj goem themselves by means of Soldiers' Councils. Officers acquiescing i; the altered situation will not be hindered in their duties."We reckon on the cooperation of the entire population. All offciawill remain at their posts."Fundamental social and political reforms will immediately cor; menee."ZURICH, Nov. 10.?The disorder has subsided in Munich, accordingto the latest reports. The whereabouts of the King is unknown Thecasualties in the noting are few, being confined for the most part tootl'ieers who resisted.The Landtag 1ms been dissolved. Only Socialists and Deputies irepermitted to enter the building. Looters arc being shot.Schleswig-Holstein RepublicFormed by Reds ' ProclamationLONDON, Nov. 10. ? Schleswig-Holstein, the Prussia:! province which for?merly belonged to Denmark, is to beproclaimed an independent republic,pays an Exchange Telegraph dispatchfrom Copenhagen.AMSTERDAM, Nov. 10.?The Work?ers' and Soldiers' Council, in a procla?mation to the people of Schlcswtg-Hol- ?fituin, Baya : I"A provisional provincial irovernmentis Vicing formed, which will cooperatewith the existing authorities in estab- ilishing n now order. Our aim Is a freesocial people'* republic. The main taskis to secure peace.""Questions beyond ton limit of theprovincial administration still belong'to the domini?n of tho'state and ?mpcrial legislature?. We arc willing to ?cooperate with the present officials 30far n.i they submit to the new course.Wo are resolved to put down any re?sistance with the forcea at our dis?posa!."Industrial districts have been estab?lished In the various cities under thesame general plan.Schleswig-Holstein, n province ofNorthwest Prussia, taken from Den?mark in lSfil, has been a prominentcentre of the growing unrest in Ger?many. The province has for centurie?!been the aourco of contention and warin Europe, chiefly because of diplomaticand political relations to the Danishcrown on one hand and the Germanconfederation on the other.The whole question of the dispositionof the two "Elbe tmchk's" came to ?crisis in 1863, upon the extinction ofHuns Admit Fear ofBattle Caused RevoltAMSTERDAM, Nov. 10.?TheBerlin "Vossic.hc Zeitung"and "Vorwaerts" confirm tha factthat the inception of the revolu?tion at Kiel was due to the misI taken idea that a cruise had been| ordered and that it was intended; to give battle to the British fleet.ithe male line of the reigning hou?e inDenmark and the death of the last heirto the duchicH. Theracial conflict be?tween German and Dane in the prov?ince added difficulties to the legal ques?tion. Alter the war of 18(53-'?4. inwhich Austria and Prussia overranDenmark, the last named state re?nounced all claims to the duchies, andAustria, which had aided Prussiaagainst the Danes, ceded her rights toSchleswig to Prussia, with the reserva?tion that "the population of the northof ?Schleswig shall again be united withDenmark in the event of their express?ing a desire so to be by a vote freeiyexercised." Under the Danish-Prus?sian treaty the people of the duchieswere allowed six years to choose theirnationality and move to Denmark ifthey so desired.Taking advantage of the terms ofthose treaties, about 50,000 from North?ern Schleswig (one-third of the popula?tion) migrated to Denmark pending theplebiscite which was to restore theircountry to them. But the plebisciten.ver came.Red Flag FloatsOver Berlin PalaceOf HohenzollernsLONDON, Nov. 10.?Dr. Liebknecht,the noted Socialist, who spent manymonths in prison for antagonizing theGerman government and who was rei leased recently, according to a Copcnj hagen dfcpatch has issued the followi ing announcement at Berlin in behalfof the Workmen's and Soldiers' Coun?cil:"The presidency of the police, aswell as the ehiss.C command, is in ourhands. Our comrades will be released."The red banner has been hoisted onthe royal palace and the red flag iswaving from the Brandenburg gato.Among those killed in the fightingI ?it, the "Cockchafer'' barracks was one\ of the workmen's leaders, known as! "Comrade" Habersroth.How far the example of the Russiarj Bolsheviki influenced the German up; heaval is an interesting question. Som<j German newspapers as late as Fridajj described the movement as BolshevismRed flags figured frequently in th.? various risings and Chancellor Ebert'j motor car floats the international em! blem. The shoulder straps were ton! from the uniforms of officers in a num' ber of cities and even the soldiers' in? sipnia were stripped from them. Russian prisoners played a part in tht'emonstrations in two or three towmReports by way of Geneva describi the revolution as continuing quietlj in the twelve pvineipal towns ani ports, which av*> now ruled by th, Soviet, consisting of workmen, so! diers and sailors. The red flag hi? been hoisted everywhere, even ?bo\' the Cologne Cathedra!.Kaiser's Son-in-LawHeld Many ShadowyClaims to KingdomThe "abdication" of Ernest August,Duke of Brunswick, may mean he hasagain indicated his Intention to giveup his claim to the thro no of the House; of Hanover, which ho yielded five years! ago. *On the other hand it may moan he? renounces the claims of his wife and; son (the Kaiser's daughter and grand?son ) to the imperial and royal throne.The Duke of Brunswick is the f?c?ond son of the Duke of Cumberland,1 of the House of Guelph, and hence is aroyal ? prince of Gr?'ur Britain. Hisj icrandfather, King; George of Hanover,I had sided with Austria against Prussiai in 1866 in the Six Weeks' War, as ai consefjuence of which Hanover wani overrun by the Prussians and the HanI overian royal house deposed.I Prince Ernest August waa born ini Pending, near Vienna, on November17, 1337. He entered the Prussian an?!i later the Bavarian armies, When hisj brother's death placed him in lino u?; heir to the thrones of hot); Hanovcjund Brunswick ho came into favor wjtrKaisar Wilhelm II. In May, 1.18, h?j married the Kai^cr':^ only daughter? Victoria Louise, and in November o! that year the duchy of Brunswick wa:j restored to him, though undflr ar1 agreement in vhkh he promised uiit swerving loyalty to the Gorman Km[ pire an?! Emperor and to the federnteirulers of Germany. Ho thus implicitly1 though not actually, renounced hi? pre1 tension:; to the kingdom of Hanoy?twhich vr.s annexed to Prussia in lrtfitjAt the outbreak of the great wathe new Duke of Brunswick took command of Iho Zietcn Hussars on thFrench frontier. In November, 101.he was wounded, but teenvere-t] ?in?returned to the front. In March, 1915.it was announced that he had retiredfrom active army service owing to asevere and probably incurable ner?vous breakdown.Reds Seize NewsBureau; SocialistsControl OfficesLONDON, Nov. 10.?An official com?munication issued to-day in Berlinsays the Wolff Bureau, the nemi-ofticial news agency, has been placedunder control of "Comrade WilliamKarle."Complaints already have been heardin Berlin that the press censorship isbeing exercised as arbitrarily by thenew as by the old r?gime.In the new German governmentthere will be only three representa?tives for the majority (bourgeois ?) par-'ties, namely, Erzberger, Gothein andRichthof en, says a dispatch fiom Co?penhagen to the Exchange TelegraphCompany. The other posts will be oc?cupied by Socialists and independents.The secretary of the Independent So?cial Democratic party, Herr Earth, hasbeen arrested, aceorditig to Berlin ad?vices, and the bureau close?!. Theprominent Socialist editor, Herr Daemig, was also arrested Saturday. Thelatter was charged with highly trea?sonable activity.} rau Krupp's Husband \Is Son of a Former]Philadelphia Woman \Bertha Krupp, owner of the great |Krupp gun works at Essen, and herhusband, Lieutenant Gustav Krupp von:Bohlen und Halbach, whose arrest was jreported yesterday, were married in1906. ?Bertha Krupp, with her sister, Bar- :bara, inherited the millions accumu- !lated by their father, Friedrich Alfred]Krupp (1834-1902); their grandfather, IAlfred Krupp (18J2-'87>, and then jgreat-grandfather, Friedrich Krupp(1787-18261, who founded the. colossalordnance factory a:s a small forge inEssen in 1810. Bertha v.as born inHugel March 29, 1886.It was while on a journey to Romein 1906 that she met Herr von Bohlen,then secretary of the Prussian Lega?tion to the Vatican. His father, Dr.von Bohlen und Halbach, was onceMinister for the Grand Duchy of Bailenat Berlin before the days of the em?pire.Both the Bohlen and Ha?bach fam?ilies have connections in the UnitedStates. The mother of Lieutenant vonBohlen was formerly Miss SophieBohlen, of Philadelphia. The grand?father of Bertha Krupp's husband onone side was an officer on the Northernside in the Civil War, while his othergrandfather made a fortune in theUnited States and returned with it toBailen, his native state,Herr von Bohlei. studied law in Lau?sanne, Strassburg and Heidelberg. Hepassed his military service as a mem?ber of a regiment of Baden dragoonsat Brusehal. He entered the diplo?matic service in 1897 and served atWashington, Peking and the Vatican.After his marriage to Bertha Krupp hetook over the active management ofI tho gun factory.Palace of Aus trionsStormed by Mob inHungarian CapitalBASEL, Nov. 10. -The palace of the jAustrian delegation at Budapest has jbeen stormed by a mob, which threwdown the Austrian escutcheons, accord- jing to a Vienna dispatch received here. ?Atrocities RouseIre of U. S. EditorsLONDON, Nov. 10.?A party ofAmerican editors, who arrived in Loti?cen in October, have returned after afortnight's trip to France and Belgium.They visited Lille and othc. evac?uated towns a few hours after theGermans left, and are burning withindignation over the German treatmento? the French and Belgians.They declare themselves for repara?tion to the last dollar of what theoccupied countries have suffered.Ebert a Pan-Germanist,Paris "Temps" DeclaresPARIS, Nov. io. -The "Temps" to?day concludes a sketch of FriedrichEbert, the new German Chancellor, asfollows:'?II?1 shares the ruling passions ofthe German. He ta a type of panGerman Socialist, not to say an im?perialist."The mails are slowaren't they?CfjratmagCarb?should be selected now. Asusual, we have our big roomopen and ready to receive ypuDUTTON'S681 Fifth Avtrnue New YorkiiKaiser Shivers as He Abdicates;Socialists Demand Princes ' ExileLONDON, Nov. 10.?Emperor William signed a letterof abdication Saturday morning at the German GrandHeadquarters in the presence of Crown Prince FrederickWilliam and Field Marshal Hindenburg, according to a dis?patch from Amsterdam to the Exchange Telegraph Com?pany. .The German Crown Prince signed his renunciation tothe throne shortly afterward.Before placing his signature to the document an urgentmessage from Philipp Scheidemann, who was a Socialistmember without portfolio in the Imperial Cabinet."washanded to the Emperor. He read it with a shiver. Thenhe signed the paper, saying :"It may be for the good of Germany."The Emperor was deeply moved. He consented to signthe document only when he received the news of the latestevents in the empire.News of Emperor William's abdication was receivedSaturday afternoon in Berlin with general rejoicing, whichwas tempered by the fear that it had come too late.The Socialists are demanding that every dynasty inGermany be suppressed and all the princes exiled.It is believed that King Ludwig of Bavaria and KingFrederick August of Saxony also have abdicated.BASEL. Nov. 10.?Wilhelm II, the reigning King ofthe monarchy of W?rttemberg, abdicated on Friday night.Ludwig, After Flight,Returns to MunichTo Save Sick QueenAMSTERDAM, Nov. 10. A Berlindispatch received here says:"Advices from Munich nrc to theeffect that the King of Bavaria, withli is daughters and his son, CrowrPrince Rupprecht, departed in motoicars Thursday night for an unknowrdestination. The Soldiers and Workmens councils occupy the royal resi??enees. J^ater ;t was said the Kinjreturned to the castle to take thiQueen, who was ill, away from th?excited city."The revolution here has been woibrilliantly There has been an almosentire absence of bloodshed. Strikehave resulted in a complete eessatio'of all work. Various rcpiments havgone over to the soldiers' and worl?men's organizations in quick successsion. Apart from some insignif'Tancages of shooting there has been corfp?ete (juiut. i"Order prevails and the military pjtrois aiready have been withdraw)Great jubilation and enthusiasm pr<vails through out the city."A dispatch received from Karlsrutsays that Grand Duke Friedrich has isued a proclamation declaring that t|Landtag will be summoned Novomb?15 to change the Constitution."Another dispatch from Stuttgasays the King of Wuerttemberg anaunces in a proclamation he shunever serve as a hindrance iu the dvelopment of the wishes of the people"The ?Soldiers an?! Workmen's Coucil has been established at Dusseldoand has issued a proclamation thplunderers will be shot and that istrikes will he permitted. The revo!tion thcro has passed without disturanee.Cast your eagle eye ?this?The United War |UCampaign means you ^but one contribution. I\Wkone for all ; all for one.Be generous!We make to fit, not to ]| measure. Clothes that fit the| various types of figure, fromi the "lithe to the sumptuousand superb."Finest fabrics; highest type?of tailoring. Money baa if'you want it!IRogeks Peet Company! Broadwayat 13th St.? Broadway? at Warren? Carl Mays TwirledWell Against Athletic?Carl Mays, the submarine shootertij the Red Sox, was the most succestfapitcher in the American League y?'against, the Mack men, winning live t?losing'but one of hi- buttles with Con?nie's crew.Cicotte was the only twirler to w>Vfour from them, and the to\Wttigt,oov.three: Ruth, Johnson, of TNtttatgtoiiMorton, "Coveleskie, Roland, Sb&v.Love. 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